Nature shots are usually cropped, because it is not possible to get close enough to the subject so that you can make a frame-filling picture. A camera with a DX sensor is a perfect teleconverter for such situations. A telephoto lens on a camera with a DX sensor, like the Nikon D5500 or D7200, gives you more megapixels than a cropped picture from a shot taken with a Nikon D810, with a full-frame/FX sensor. The Nikon 300 mm f/2.8 AF-S ED VR II is an extremely compact telephoto lens, suited to nature, sport and landscape photography, with super-fast auto focus and built-in image stabilization. It is ideal for demanding (semi-)professionals who set the highest requirements for optical and mechanical quality, but for whom a Nikon 300 mm f/2.8 is still too heavy or too expensive. |
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Nikon AF-S 300 mm f/4E PF ED VR review @ DX |
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With a shortest setting distance of 140 cm and a magnification of 1:0.25, the Nikon 300 mm f/4 PF ED VR is not really a close-up lens. If you do use this lens from a short distance, then you will benefit from an unbelievably small focal depth and a beautiful bokeh. | |
Build and auto focus |
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The two most notable characteristics of the Nikon AF-S 300 mm f/4E PF ED VR are naturally the compact dimensions (15 cm is unbelievably short for a 300 mm FX telephoto lens) and the low weight (750 grams). If you compare that with the Nikon AF-S 300 mm f/4, then that is nearly half. If you want to work for a long time with a light telephoto lens with high image quality, then you can’t beat the Nikon AF-S 300 mm f/4E PF ED VR. |
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Fresnel technology |
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Anyone who read our review of the Nikon 300 mm f/4 on a Nikon D810 is already familiar with the principle of a Fresnel lens. If not, then you can read a comprehensive description of it there. A Fresnel lens is a special, ribbed lens that is used, for example, lighthouses, overhead projectors and in viewfinders of SLR cameras. The use of a Phase Fresnel lens element (PF) provides both shorter length and a remarkably lower weight of the lens, without any decrease in the image quality. | |
Vibration reduction |
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This 300 mm telephoto lens is outfitted with built-in vibration reduction technology. According to Nikon, that’s good for 3 stops. Nikon has made a service report that the lowest serial numbers of this lens (the firmware of lenses with a serial number of 205101 or higher has already been updated) need to undergo a firmware update, so that the VR can achieve better results on a Nikon D800, D800E or D810. |
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Bokeh |
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An advantage of the using a lens designed for cameras with an FX sensor on a camera with a DX sensor is that you do not have any trouble with vignetting and therefore no trouble with cat’s eye bokeh in the corners. The brightness is not entirely optimal for a great bokeh, but the long focal distance and the 9 rounded lamellae make it really very good. In multiple shots, I was pleasantly surprised by the bokeh, which showed no disruptive rings. | |
Vignetting, flare, chromatic aberration |
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Nano Crystal Coat reduces image shadows and light flecks effectively, so that the brightness and the contrast of images increases. The application of a Fresnel element in the Nikon AF-S 300 mm f/4 PF ED means that this lens can be more sensitive to light edges with a bright light source that is shining directly into the lens. We encountered little of it, but above you can see a shimmering edge of a roof in the bright sun, with light flecks. To compensate, Nikon has even included an extra light flecks correction for PF under the vignetting correction in its own RAW converter (CaptureNX). |
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Chromatic aberration, vignetting and distortion are all perfectly controlled: Vignetting is still just visibly present at the largest aperture; we measured half a stop of vignetting in jpg files. After 1 stop stopping down, it is impossible to recognize. Chromatic aberration (red/green edges at sharp contrast transitions in the corners) is as good as absent. An element of ED glass (extra low dispersion) and the PD element effectively limit chromatic aberration to a minimum. |
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Sharpness |
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A resolution test of a lens on a camera with a 24-megapixel DX sensor is even more critical than the same test with a 36-megapixel FX sensor. This lens also shows very high image quality here. The sharpness at full aperture is already very high, with the corners not lagging behind the center. After stopping down 1 stop, the highest sharpness was achieved in our measurements. |
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Nikon AF-S 300 mm f/4E PF ED VR @ D7100, 1/800 sec, f/5.6, 400 ISO |
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Conclusion Nikon AF-S 300 mm f/4E PF ED VR review with Nikon D7100
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Look in our list of reviewed lenses or the lenses we have reviewed with a Nikon mount in order to compare the performance of this lens with that of other lenses. Test camera: Nikon D7100 |
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Pros
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Cons
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If you want to work for a long time with a light telephoto lens with high image quality, then you cannot beat the Nikon AF-S 300 mm f/4E PF ED VR. As far as image quality is concerned, it is a dream lens. And the built-in image stabilization makes it possible to choose very long shutter times (1/40 sec) and still come home with sharp pictures. |